"Ben- Hur"-William Wyler-1959
This film is one of only 3 films to win 11 Oscars. William Wyler was nominated for best director 11 times. He is supposed to have remarked that it took a Jew to make a great film about Christ. Wyler was a master of spectacles. His producer, Sam Weisman, died during the production, so he was forced to assume the lead producers in addition to his directing responsibilities. He survived a bout with influenza, but he only missed 2 days out of a 9 months shooting schedule at Cinne Citta in Rome.
The chariot race is one of the great set pieces in film history. It required 10,000 extras and the largest everfilm set. Yakima Canut stunt God directed the filming of the race. He also served as an instructor in Chariot driving for Charlton Heston (Ben- Hur) and Stephen Boyd (Messala). 263 feet of film was shot for every foot used in the chariot race. The editing is seamless. $4 million of the reported $15 million budget went to the filming of the chariot race. The film was originally budgeted at $5 million; fortunately it returned $75 million at the box office.
It is interesting to note that this is the last MGM film to receive a best picture Oscar.
The source material was the novel "Ben- Hur : A story of the Christ" by General Lew Wallace. Wallace was a Union general n the Civil War. It was a huge success, and three silent films were made based on the story. The more famous featured Francis X as Messala and Ramon Navaro as Judah Ben-Hur. Surprisingly, I couldn't find a free streaming option, but the 1959 film is available on YouTube.This 1925 film is credited with being the foundation of MGM. You can watch the chariot race which has a real epic crash; extras died in the sea battle. A new score was written for this version. You can watch the chariot race on Daily Motion (best version). The deaths and injuries in this film caused rules to be established to ensure safety in future films.
This film is one of only 3 films to win 11 Oscars. William Wyler was nominated for best director 11 times. He is supposed to have remarked that it took a Jew to make a great film about Christ. Wyler was a master of spectacles. His producer, Sam Weisman, died during the production, so he was forced to assume the lead producers in addition to his directing responsibilities. He survived a bout with influenza, but he only missed 2 days out of a 9 months shooting schedule at Cinne Citta in Rome.
The chariot race is one of the great set pieces in film history. It required 10,000 extras and the largest everfilm set. Yakima Canut stunt God directed the filming of the race. He also served as an instructor in Chariot driving for Charlton Heston (Ben- Hur) and Stephen Boyd (Messala). 263 feet of film was shot for every foot used in the chariot race. The editing is seamless. $4 million of the reported $15 million budget went to the filming of the chariot race. The film was originally budgeted at $5 million; fortunately it returned $75 million at the box office.
It is interesting to note that this is the last MGM film to receive a best picture Oscar.
The source material was the novel "Ben- Hur : A story of the Christ" by General Lew Wallace. Wallace was a Union general n the Civil War. It was a huge success, and three silent films were made based on the story. The more famous featured Francis X as Messala and Ramon Navaro as Judah Ben-Hur. Surprisingly, I couldn't find a free streaming option, but the 1959 film is available on YouTube.This 1925 film is credited with being the foundation of MGM. You can watch the chariot race which has a real epic crash; extras died in the sea battle. A new score was written for this version. You can watch the chariot race on Daily Motion (best version). The deaths and injuries in this film caused rules to be established to ensure safety in future films.
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